4.7 Article

Cometabolic degradation of 1,4-dioxane by a tetrahydrofuran-growing Arthrobacter sp. WN18

Journal

ECOTOXICOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL SAFETY
Volume 217, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2021.112206

Keywords

1,4-dioxane; Tetrahydrofuran; Tetrahydrofuran monooxygenase; Biotransformation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation [41572217]
  2. National Water Pollution Control and Treatment Science and Technology Major Project of China [2018ZX07109-003]
  3. US National Science Foundation CAREER award [CBET-1846945]
  4. United States Geological Survey (USGS) State Water Resources Research Act Program [2018NJ400B]

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The study identified that the newly isolated bacterium Arthrobacter sp. WN18 can co-oxidize dioxane and THF, showing potential for dealing with this mixed pollution. Results indicate that THF monooxygenase is crucial for the degradation of THF and dioxane, and WN18 can maintain activity under various environmental conditions, demonstrating its bioremediation potential.
1,4-Dioxane (dioxane), an emerging groundwater contaminant, is frequently detected in landfill leachates with its structural analog, tetrahydrofuran (THF). Along with undesirable leakage of landfill leachates, dioxane and THF inevitably percolate into groundwater leading to a broader region of contamination. Cometabolic bioremediation is an effective approach to manage commingled THF and dioxane pollution. In this study, a newly isolated bacterium Arthrobacter sp. WN18 is able to co-oxidize dioxane with THF as the primary substrate. Meanwhile, the THF-induced thmADBC gene cluster was responsible for the dioxane degradation rate indicating THF monooxygenase is the essential enzyme that initializing alpha-hydroxylation of THF and dioxane. Further, gamma-butyrolactone and HEAA were characterized as the key metabolites of THF and dioxane, respectively. In addition, WN18 can tolerate the inhibition of trichloroethylene (5.0 mg/L) as a representative of co-existing leachate constituent, and sustain its activity at various pH (5 11), temperatures (15-42 degrees C), and salinities (up to 4%, as NaCl wt). Like other Arthrobacter species, WN18 also exhibited the capability of fixing nitrogen. All this evidence indicates the feasibility and advantage of WN18 as a thmADBC-catalyzed inoculator to bioremediate co-contamination of THF and dioxane.

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